let's discuss with nmr tv critic eric duggens, who is also nbc analyst. eric, good to see you.>> good to see you on msnbc. >> i know, i've crossed over. i'm so sorry. but there's been some sorting that productions will have to start writing indemnity wavers and making cast and crew sign them, in case they should get covid-19 on the job. what do you see as the practical path forward for some of these big-ticket productions? of the scale of, like, mandalorian, for example. >> yeah. i think it's going to be hard f for production to come back until there's capacity to do quick, reliable testing of people who will be working on these productions, to find out who might be asymptomatic and have the virus and who doesn't. we have already seen performers and staffers in different media companies get sick and die from this virus. so i think it would be tough for a studio or production company or a network to demand that people go to work, and not be able to assure them that they're entering a workplace where no one has the virus. or, at least, that they have some idea who hasn't or who d